To not have any male friends

I noticed at work recently that I am much more relaxed and confident when I'm with the women on our team. I am more quiet and withdrawn when men are present. Obviously I don't want this to be the case and I'd like to be myself around everyone, regardless of gender. So I started thinking about how I am outside work and it struck me: I don't have any male friends. Not one. I socialise with lots of married couples (and am married myself), and DH has some lovely friends that I've got to know quite well... but I don't have any man-friends that I got to know myself, independently.

Is that normal? Do most of you have a more equal gender balance among your friends?

I don't have many, one that I speak to regularly, one who now lives overseas. I'm not uncomfortable around men, but I grew up in a very female family (no boys born in the family for 36 years until my ds came along) and I went to an all girls school. In my 20s I was very much like you though, having had so little contact with men I had no idea how to speak to them, I was incredibly shy and awkward with men.

I don't know how usual it is but I shouldn't think it's worth worrying about in a social sense. Are you from an all girl, no brother family? If it's causing you work problems then more worrying perhaps.

At uni, women were in the minority in my college (3:1 ratio) so I had lots of male friends. In my first few jobs again, more men than women. I am quite girly BUT I also like football and stuff, so always used to get on well with men, and I quite like banter-y type conversations.

however what I have realised now I'm older and possibly wiser is that there's always an agenda with male-female friendships, and they always go wrong. I have been dumped as a friend by several guys whose wives/girlfriends didn't like their friendship with me. I have been used either to make men look more popular, or to help them in career terms. Or it ends up with them fancying me, me not being interested, and it all getting awkward.

I am currently working with someone who a couple of years ago told me I was his best friend. He now doesn't even acknowledge my existence.

I'm slightly younger but have male friends (not loads but some) from school, college, university and past/current jobs. Did you go to a girls school? I do think sometimes that girls who grow up without brothers sometimes miss out on the crucial memo that there isn't really such a thing as "boys are like this, girls are like this" (likewise boys who grow up without girls around). IMO men and women are pretty similar so my advice would be talk to men as if they were women. They really aren't mysterious or a different species

YAB a bit unreasonable. Be friends with whoever you want, but excluding half of humanity for having a penis is, well, limiting. As for the 'agenda' theory, maybe I'm just dim but I've never noticed it.

I would like a few more male friends but apart from one who I meet up with once a year (!!) I have none. I think this particular male friend only stays in sporadic touch because we were flatmates 20 years ago so we do have a bond. But, men aren't motivated to have 'faux friendships' with me because I'm not pretty &/or young. So therefore, nope. When I was young of course I had men pretending to be my friend, and then when I told them I was going out with x,y or z they just said 'see ya then'. Pretty much.

Some very attractive women delude themselves that they are great at maintaining friendships with men. Men just want to be around them.

I used to have lots of male friends but now I work from home I find old colleagues and friends who bother to maintain contact are usually female as are the majority of the parents who are chatty at the school gate. I don't really think its a problem not to have any although the more friends the merrier.

I also had more male friends when I had a very cool and handsome boyfriend; men wanted to be him, women wanted to be with him and some of my male friends thought somehow being friends with me would make them more like him!

ginandtonic that's a very sad attitude to have! Do you really believe that all men are only interested in famale friends because they're attracted to them?! I have quite a few mixed friendship groups and both the men and women in them range from stunning to not at all pretty and from single to long term happily married. We are friends because we are friends, not because of age, availability or attractiveness.

Well, it doesn't make ME sad. I know I'm capable of friendship with men. But they don't want it. I have plenty of female friendships. If I ever had a boyfriend it would be imperative to me that he was a friend, first and foremost. So, possibly it's a bit sad to have so few male friendships, but my attitude is not sad. I'm ready and capable of having friendships with men.

Also, if you're married and you are friendLY with your husband's friends, then it's easy to say 'aw poor gin&tonic, what a sad attitude'. But it's just circumstance and convenience that puts in a group situation with men, and you're friendly. I could easily be in those shoes. But when you're single with no husband who has male friends, then, not so easy to "tick off" male friends and say to yourself oh yes well done me, i have male friends!

I didn't mean you were sad, I meant to believe that what you say of men is true is rather upsetting.

I am a single parent too and I have never held down a long term romantic relationship with a man. That is very sad but the issue is all with me (trust, own space, MH issues etc) and absolutely not the fault of men.

Men in general are as capable of friendship with anybody as women in general are.